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f Pains I Very Severe 4 "I suffered from womanly \ troubles which grew worse ? and worse as the puonths i went by," say# Mrs.1 L. H, I Oantrcll. of R. F. D. 9, Gaines 0 viUe, Georgia. ? "1 frequently had very % severe pains. These were so ? bad thut I was forced to go ? to bed and stay there. It 4 seemed to ine my back would H come in two. ? CARDUI For Female Troubles "I taught school for a while, but my health was so bud 1 would have to stay out gome times. This weut on till I got so bad I didn't know what to do. "One day* I read about the merits of Cardui, nnd as I had some friends who had been helped by it, 1 thought I would try it. I began to ?et better after I had taken hslf a bottle. 1 decided to keep on and give it a thorough trial and I did. I took in all about 12 bottles and now I am perfectly well. I do not Buffer any pain and can do all my housework." At All Druggists' F.-m FATHER KILLS DAUGHTER Marlboro Mart" Then Attempts Suicide By Cutting Throat McColl, S. C., Oct. 13. ? Because he objected to her marriage, Alfred Wright, a citiz.cn of McColl, this af ternoon fired two bullets through the bead of his daughter, Annie Mae, kill in*,' her instantly and then cut his throat with a pocket knife. He 13 r;u\v in the McColl hospital where Nttle hope is held out for his recovery. \V right's daughter was married last! Tviik in Dillon, S. C., to Benme Hard son. Her father objected to the mar k-iage and attempted to have it. an nulled, the couple had lived together until' yesterday when a hearing was he el before Mayor S. T. Tatum, who juled that they were man and wife, having lived together as such. After, the trial the gill went to home of her father. This after noon. wh^k- .she was itting at a sew n<c niac June, Wi-ight walked up be 1 ? ! her. fired two shots into her h'HJ. and, running from the house, v ?)*. ?> is \vn throat. How Doctors Treaj: Coids and the Flu Tc 1 reak up a cold overnight or to cut short an attack of grippe, in fiu' r za, sore throat or tonsillitis, phy sknins and druggists are now rccom nsir.dir.g Calotabs, the purified and rctir.cd calomel compound tablet that gives you the effects of calomel and r&hs combined, without the unpleas ant i ffccts ( f either. Cue <>)? two (Calotab3 at bed-timo with V. ,B wiil low of water, ? -that's ell. r ;ilt nausea nor the slightest jntrrference with your eating, work ; Jcasure. Next morning your cold vai:iyhed. your system is tbor tuj-hly purified and you are feeling fir," with a hearty appetite for break fast. Eai what you please, ? no dan ger. v . Cot u family package, containing -oil dire.'tions, only 35 cents. At nny store. (adv) Xmbulance Service Day or Night Motor Equipment of the Beat ( . W. EVANS - . MORTICIAN ? 'l-phones 533 DeKalb St. $1 .ind 2 8 'i Camden, S. C. COLUMBIA LUMBER & MANUFACTURING CO. MILL WORK SASH, DOORS, BLINDS AND LUMBER PLAIN & HULER STS. Phone 71 COLUMBIA, S. C. T. B. BRUCE Veterinarian Nay Phone 30 ? Night Phou? 114 campew, a. c J f.. v 114 v* Come Upon Loot Mo.mon Trails j < urlirtf* old u/i'K iLiils rco u'. I) tU ? i U-. . r. (! till \ C rilUMd 111# t'.llhoial s:. j 4'-* ihviw?'?? til yo-aiy in l;iua*^h ui : 1...1UM11! iweuien into (Ik- o till.) I.!.;. In, .!?*>?. - l)t iu# l.'.ii.' I Ilk'. ; t l.l- i> iilt'lict s fotttt'4 lire llvv>? of ill" : ii>H Mui'niuti Imii,. wliick : >hu . , .... 1 . 1 c?il i:r> ago ?u!ilir-->\'tl Ultih j the I'l.cllic >i uthwvtl, act ordin-. i tii I >< ?} New \ ink W'tnUl. T !,il 1. Ml !iyu SiiJl HOl'Uill'- J (I'v.n. ?'?! mill s ?muiIi of hake Ar.nw- < <? Aiurmoti \ illume, liilU'il ' alii r S;UI Laky Ol I, v, (tiui lu the j?outli .\ ? . I v i'JiI'liVllUft ? i v .i ivimJ \UvVl i pii nict" I, iij, Silling l tit* lVK>|K!t01li>U> j Journey. VV.liUt ? 4* ? ??- t\ ? c .11 ax Lu.io Arrow head \\;?S at thill III. IV a rugged. IIIOUIV I lit KCCliOU Willi jUshlUg s.reaUiv. | lo>i, trails tfi'e foeheved. ro. Ituve j fr, \ 1 1 <1 1 Ids sec'lbn* With ili?> com i iu,v of colliery, the mount;. in stream* j v. . rc ,.-tr;;nr?i d apii l.,;lU Hoar lake citmo ljuo existence. Later a huge earth-tilled dtiiii l.iiOO feet wltle at the base* with u ' capacity. ' of 77n acres of waUM. rivaled Lake Arrowhead. J In the \lrgin forest of oak. cedar Had fir surrounding the present lake old rouds wind through the trpw to the water's. 0(1 go, where they dlsii^i- ( pear to emerge agnlh un the opposite Side of tlie luUe. The hMorleul research workers be lleve these trails once traversed the former mountain sloped and merged with the old Arrowhead trail In the desert, near Vlctorviile and llesperla. Holidays in Brazil Come Thick and Fast The niauw ho co v cLs nui n e.r u ua holi s should move to lirazih According to a work issued by a trust company of New York, "Hani; and Public Holi days Throughout the World," Ilrazll eujoys eleven public holidays, aoVl aug ments (his allowance by many unofli cfal holidays which are generally ob served. Starting well off the mark on - January l, wllh New Year's day (Ik re Is an Interval for work until the Cth, which ls~Eplphauy. Follows h period of hard slogging until the -Oth, whin the state of Ivio downs tools. Another state follows stilt on the 25th, 'and still another on the liT t li, which is ihe last holiday in January. Most months are like that in Brazil. in Tart one or tWo months - -such lis April ? are *till more houniifully provided with holiday's. - ? v Welcome Stranger A distinguished westerner, subject 10 severe attacks of Indigestion, wa? travel iny with his wife. Late one night in a pttllmap, he was seized with an attack, llis wife slipped on a kimono a fid hurried to the wa*hroet?i to prepjire a mustard plaster. Shi rushed back hastily threw 'aside the curtains, opened his p<?j:una? and ap f)lled the plaster securely before *h?? discovered it wasn't her husband, but a strange man. She Met) horrified to the right berth and told tirr husband, who went into such fits of laughter that his Indigestion was cured. If they tried to take off, the plaster they would awaken the stranger. To avoid a diilifuft explanation they decided Just to. leave it on. At 6 a. m. there was a terrific roar from 'the stranger's berth. "Porter," he howled, "who the h ? 1 put a porou pine in my bed!" ? Everybody's Mjijr.i zne. 1 Origin of the Clock The first clock, according to Harry I 0. Brearly, was produced about IKK) j A. I>. l?y Gerbert, the monk, who was ' tlie most accomplished scholar of the ape. At that time the monks were the only people of learning ro whom marking off of a day's time was sig nificant. They used bells to mark off the various periods of the day, much as frotne churches do today. The sounding of the ancient, hells was de pended upon by all the people and that Is why tile word "clock" was taken from the French word "cloche," which means "hell." At the close of' ihe Thirteenth century a clock was set up in St. Paul's cathedral in Ivon don, and In 1581 (Jnllleo, an Italian youth-jliscovered the |n*lnciple of the ..pendjyfet? Famous Knights Rare In British history theiv are literally thousand* of men wl*u have been dubbed knights, but in history the number who stand out as reaily fa mous are few. Among J hose -accorded real t'nine by Sir William Mull, author of -Knightage,*' are: Drake. Sidney, G'renville, Jtnlelgh, I-'rohisher and Hawkins among the more an< icnt nnd Shackleton among the moderns. In philosophy the famous one listed !s ' Macon : In art, Lelghton, Aita-Tadema and ? ircharr.'son. The staKe claims Sir ; llenrv I r> In tr : music, Sir Arthur Kulll \?n; scicn<?\ Sir William Crook ex; and politics. Sir William Harcourt. Early Electric Traction The eleeiric motor v\as thst ' muilf by Abbe Salvatore del Negro in I Italy In IS '.Ut. ffobert Davidson of ; Aberdeen began experimenting about IK'ih with I lie c'vutrlc motor as a means of traction and constructed a J powerful engine carrying K-tttery of " Mi fellR. The beginning of nivderu j ?leotrlc traction dates from IS78 when ; the firm of Siemens & Haskr put into ! oOersflnn flw? flrat electrlr mo't^ay ?:t 1 ihe MMHiI exposltimi in Berlin. The folbtwinr year ThmAas A Kdlson of*.1 rratvu JiTi expeTUDeCtat Mm.' !n Menlo ' "j * AIR PILOT FOUND DEAD Ames Disappeared Night of October 1, Carrying Mail Hellfonte, l'a., Oct. 11. The fran tic search for Charles Ames, air mail pilot, who disappeared 10 days ago, ended today on Nittany Mountain, six miles northeast of Bcllefonte, when the body of the bird man was found in his wrecked plane, \Vhich had pr&shtd against the side' of the mighty hill. A paity of seau-hers, one of the ? ha liamped the hills and valleys since Ames was reported lost, .came upon ? the wreckage late this morning. Amos' body, bearing only a few brpiies, was foundf in the cock pit of the ship. . Naturo conspired to keep the fate of the birdman unknown, for, when the wrecked ship was found, it was discovered that four large trees, broken off when the plane crashed into them, had formed a perfect cover. Under them, completely shrouded, rested the wreckage con taining the pilot's body.%> ? Word of the find spread through the' mountains like wildfire, and within a short time, hundreds of the ?searchers, together with air mail of ficials from the Bellefonte field, were on the scene. The body was brought ta BeHefonte /md taken to an under taker's establishment. ^ That Ames met sudden death was the belief of the air mail official?. His face was badly bruised, but Jt-he body contained few other marks. The point where Ames crashed is Ttfcnsely wooded~ It was evident 4hai the pilot, flying low, crashed into the four trees, the plane coming down to a stop against the trunk of the fifth. Ames was on his course and w was near Hecla Light, beacon for air | men, when he met his fate. Over the point where the body rested in the ( deb . :s other airmen have passed each i day, flying east and west with their [cargoes of mail for New York and j Chicago. j The mail in Ames' plane was in i tact, and shortlv after it was re moved from the wreckage, it was on I its way west in another plane. Business Went To The Bad Char|es . Vo.gler, thirty years* or more ago advertised St. Jacob's Oil from the Atlantic to the Pacific and from Canada to the Gulf of Mexico. This he did before placing a bottle of his pre pa ml ion on sale. A great clamor arose among the people for St. Jacob's Oil, as Vogler had made the folks believe they couldn't do without it, and of course there was a great scramble among druggists | and supply housrs for the new cure all. Vog.'er in a short time was' a J rich man for the sale of his pradyc: brought him much money. . . In the course of time Vogler died. A syndicate was formed to purchase at an enormous price the right to continue the manufacture of St. Ja cob's Oil. "We will make a fortune because of the great demand for the preparation/' said the purchasers. But the new owners were near | sighted and cut off the advertising appropriation that the Shrewd Vog ler had foreseen was necessary to sell his medicine. Because they did not advertise the new company was soon in the hands of a receiver.- ? Monroe Enquirer. Bans Eight-Foot Alligator Sumter, Oct. 11. ? Mr. G. J. Myers drove into toWn Friday evening with an alligator tied to the running board of his car, which is the biggest spec imen of the tribe seen in Sumter this year. The alligator^, was eight feet six inches long and weighed 1-10 'pound?. Mr. Myers and others were going to Pinewood early Friday morn ing and came across the saurian in, the road about five miles southwest of toWn, evidently making his way from -Cain'* millpond to Old, Ford, or'vice versa. Mr. Myers stopped his car and went to a nearby farm house,} where he borrowed a gun and rifle' and returned to the 'gator, which was showing fight, as the two men left in the car had been pelting it with clods to keep it from escaping. They shot it several times and left it to die, which it did about noon, about six hours later. Returning in the evening Mr. Myers tied the 'gator to his car and came on into town, where it has attracted a tremendous amount of interest. Charlotte Capitalist Dies Charlotte, Oct. 11. ? Robert M. Mil ler, <?9, of Charlotte, retired capitalist and former president of the American Cotton Manufacturers' Association, died suddenly late today at Atlantic City, N. J., according to advices re ceived by business associates here. Heart disease was given as the cause of deatk. The father of Colonel Hans Heg, the beloved Norweffi&Q officer, of the | Civil war, founded the first Norweg ian newspaper In America at Nor-| pi.basi re Yacht dbstkqybiy Mmiiv l)rownt>d When Boat ( aiwlifs in Storm ? i Kau (iallie. Kla., Oct. H. ? The pleasure boat Clara B., owned by ('apt. Kd. Arnold, of Maiadar, Kla., and under charter to the Melbourne Farms, vapsited whan attempting to turn about just outside Sebatian In let, twenty-seven miles south t?f here tit# tonight. Kourto'ii ?iv known have drowned, while several h?'o re- j ported missing. ' A rough *ea made rescue work almost impossible, while tho*o who were saved won badly cut from lu'iiiu tlm.wn against tho i<>. k jetties. The hunt left here Igle this after noon for a short sea journey, it was .<M. but . M passing through the inlet south <*f here found tho sea running ,?o high' that it was deeidrd to put SIX CHRYSLER four ? - ? y-i ? -v* ' ?" WE ARE NOW DEALERS IN KERSHAW COUNTY For The New Chrysler Automobiles Right now is the best time in 1925 to select and pur chase a new automobile .4// the new models are defi nitely in the market and you can get \mmediate delivery It is our daily pleasure to show and demonstrate the new , Chrysler Models to those interested in fine cars Come in and see them at your earliest convenience "Some of these cars are just rearm' to go' Smiths' Garage CAMDEN, S. C. Ml S S E. M. M c C V R I) Y The W ell-Known Toilet Goods Specialist Will give you a free massage in your own home by appointment Careful attention to your skin will insure the attractive ?nd personal charm that every woman craves. To Neglect Your Skin Is to Forfeit Its Beauty We have engaged Miss K. M. McCurdy, the well-known toilet good specialist, for the week of October 26-31, to call on a number of ladies in Camden each day, to give free massage and individual help and advice on the care of the skin. An Exceptional Opportunity for One Week Only Step into1 the store, write or phone us. We'll do the rest. Understand Miss McCurdy's massage and advice is absolutely free. , u t*. Miss McCurdy will also be glad to talk to any Woman's Club in Camden free of charge. DeKalb Pharmacy Telephone 95 Zemp & DePass Telephone 10 A Savings Account Gives One a Feeling of Security A savings account is a first aid to savers. It gives you a feeling of security , both as f to the safety of your money now and as to your comfort in the future . Loan & Savings Bank CAPITAL $100,000.00 about and return to ppit. Tht? rough He a and the short turn are thought to have been - the cause for Vhe upset* Fishermen joined in the roscuo. Hank Fire 1 Victim DieH ( koi-k H))U t% M of South Bond, lnd., superintendent of eori-itiuctiou on a uew bank build ing ho?e, died today of burns he suf forod October I, when ho was trapped by a fire on iho m.'J'.v.anino 'floor of tin- building. Thpt tiro originated, it was said, from a cigarette or mutch being thrown upon combustible ma terial used in the eont ruction of tho building. Mr, Caldwell was an em ploye of the Walter Kill Company. He is turvlved b& Me. ('aldweli jMiu twy young chihiion. An , auton%bilev inatuita.ot.ur or in France has boon giantv! !ho privi lege of the Kiffel Tower fur an olee trie display advertisement. The BULL'S EYE Editor and Qenmrat Manaqtr ~ WILLROOftR* * Another Bull" Durham advert Ue mcnt bv Will Roger*, Zittftld FoU lie* ana tcreen ?t?r, and leading American humofift* Morccomlng* Watch for them? The Wise Guy and The Clown A constant reader of my "Bull" Durham Adfi writes in and says; "If there was another smoking To bacco the equal of "Bull" Dur ham a lot of lis would quit you no matter how much it cost. But alas there is no equal at ai.y price as we have all' found out ut various times. So we must hasten to turn the pages and groan, whenever we encounter the CLOWN Ads of Will Rogers, to discredit the worth LD'S FAVORITE Ad for me himself. He knocked' i me but he boosted "Bull' ' Durham. . Me fell right into my hands. Ifsonly by thfe wisdom of our smart people that us CLOWNS and Fools arc allowed to ride in Limouy -les. They say "The Lord protects the fool ish," so, I am nestling right under his wing. So thanks Mr/ Smart Man, write us another Ad. It will only cost you f.vo ccku. P. S. ? There will be another piece here two weeks from now, I<ook for it. a See that Bird wrote this whole iCGO." a